Nick AndreottolaTwitter A Texas fracking magnate stuck his personal concierge with $240,000 in unreimbursed expenses for luxury items such as his wife’s Louboutins, all while getting high and drunk at high-end clubs and restaurants, according to a new lawsuit.

Nick Andreottola of the Manhattan-based Status Luxury LLC first met Breitling Energy head Chris Faulkner in 2006 when he booked him a private room at Per Se, the documents state.

During the next few years, while Andreottola worked for Faulkner, the “belligerently intoxicated” businessman got booted from the Miami dance club Snatch, the upscale Manhattan restaurant Cipriani and the Manhattan hotspot TAO, the suit says.

By 2014, Faulkner bragged that he had spent $7 million — mostly billed to his company — partying at nightclubs around the world, according to the Manhattan Supreme Court suit.

Andreottola says his client was so blitzed at the clubs that he literally had to pick up after him, “frequently” retrieving Faulkner’s misplaced wallet, keys and wedding ring, the suit says.

“Faulkner would often lose these items in extreme states of inebriation,” the suit says.

In another wild incident, the assistant learned from an employee at The Box Soho in London that Faulkner was so drunk Nov. 26, 2011, he “could not even speak coherently with the host,” the documents state.

Yet he was functioning well enough to repeatedly attempt to “hand one of the managers $6,000 English pounds in cash, asking for a certain substance,” according to court papers.

While working for the hard-partying exec, Andreottola allegedly had to step up with his own credit card to cover for his boss. For example, after Faulkner’s wife’s card was declined for a $9,384.99 purchase at Christian Louboutin’s Horatio Street boutique in February, Andreottola covered it, the suit says.

Faulkner is married to the Tamra Freedman, the former head of a company called Porn Toys and an adult DVD Web site called BigVideos.

Their $290,000 nuptials were featured on the reality TV show “Platinum Weddings.”

In his suit, Andreottola says he also had to cover the cost of a $3,000 blanket that Faulkner and his friends took from a Park City, Utah, restaurant and two Cartier bracelets worth $23,600.

“Faulkner’s spending was nothing short of extravagant,” yet he let Andreottola pick up the tabs without compensating him, according to court papers.

And now, because of Faulkner’s “delinquency,” Status Luxury’s relationships with “hard-to-access” vendors are souring, the suit says.

Faulkner, a 38-year-old college dropout, founded the $42 million Breitling Energy in Dallas, Texas.